All posts tagged WordPress

How to type special characters in Ubuntu

Em dash explosion On Macs I always appreciated the ease with which you could type special characters that don’t appear on the keyboard, like accented letters (á) or dashes (—). For example, for accented letters, you first hold down the Option key and press the appropriate key for the accent (` for a grave accent, e for acute accent, u for dieresis), and then press the letter you’d like under the accent — resulting in à, á, ä, etc.

On Windows I think it’s more complicated, but let’s say as little as possible about Windows.

On Linux, I’ve been assuming it would be similarly complicated, but it turns out to be only slightly less intuitive than Macs. Here’s what you need to do to get the typographical goodness flowing:

  1. Figure out what your compose key is — i.e. the key that performs the function of Option in the Mac example above. By default I believe it’s Shift+AltGr (i.e. the right Alt key), but if you want something simpler, go to System > Preferences > Keyboard > Layouts > Layout Options… > Compose key position. I use the Windows key as the compose key, since it doesn’t do much else on Linux.
  2. Learn the compose key combinations for the characters you often use. Em dashes (—) are compose + --- (three hyphens); en dashes (–) are compose + --.; acute accents are compose + ' plus the vowel you’re after.

I’m not sure why double quotation marks are not on that list, but I’ll post an update if I figure them out.

PS — Speaking of proper typography, while I appreciate WordPress’s automatic conversion to proper, curly quotation marks, the algorithm could be improved. Quotes inside parentheses get bungled on the left side, as do quotes surrounded by hyphens. Examples from recent posts:

non-”Chopsticks”-type performers

(“Rock N’ Roll Cowboy Clothes since 1932″)

Migrating wikis & blogs

The hosting coop I host my websites at upgraded its servers last year (over a decent stretch of time, to put it mildly), and it’s past time that I take the final steps of migrating my stuff to the new servers. Technically the deadline was December 31, but they’re keeping the old servers online for various reasons, and I’ve been too busy to migrate until now.

I’ve put in at least 4 hours today, and so far I’ve only got Quakerpedia migrated. And the feature that rewrites the URLs to be prettier — John Woolman instead of index.php?title=John Woolman — isn’t working. But I did get www.quakerpedia.org to work without messing up the preexisting en.quakerpedia.org, so I feel a little bit of pride in my humble geek skills.

Next is Opensolo, the online portion of a friend of mine’s dance thesis, and then the quakerism.net blogs. I did If I told you earlier, since it was so easy. (On that subject, sadly, the Bay Windows article is gone due to their restructuring their site… here are the first few paragraphs.)